SLO faces fines, arrest of workers over toxic dumping

January 10, 2012

By KAREN VELIE

San Luis Obispo is looking at possible civil and administrative fines as well as the arrests of city workers following the dumping of toxic chemicals in a city facility, City Attorney Christine Dietrick told council members and managers Thursday.

The news from Dietrick is a reversal of the position that the city has taken for almost a year that the dumping of the toxic chemicals was neither serious, nor a violation of California’s toxic substances laws. As recently as Dec. 16, the city attorney’s office was reassuring the city council that the dumping did not violate any state regulations.

The California Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC), and other regulatory agencies, started to investigate the deliberate dumping of the chemicals following an exclusive CalCoastNews story on the incident. The state agencies have been interviewing city workers in the wake of the story.

CalCoastNews reported Dec. 16 that Bud Nance, a manager with the city’s utilities department, told several subordinates to empty out cans of acetones, varnish, epoxy, paints and creosotes onto the yard’s asphalt parking lot near a wetlands area.

The city attorney’s office sent an email to council members and CalCoastNews following the publication of its story claiming that dumping chemicals on asphalt is an “acceptable method to dispose of latex paint.” Andrea Visveshwara, assistant city attorney, said that after the city dries out approved coatings, they scrape them up and toss the dried paint into the garbage.

Other chemicals were dumped as well, Visveshwara, wrote.

“Unfortunately, in the midst of the latex paint cans, other coatings were present and included in the processing,” Visveshwara said.

The city attorney said that the “accidental” addition of other chemicals did not require reporting to the  Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC).

When CalCoastNew broke the story of the dumping, the city responded, claiming in an email to CalCoastNews that the incident occurred on Feb. 2, 2011, that the products were primarily latex paint, that the chemicals were contained to asphalt and that they were cleaned up the day they were dumped.

However, dated pictures show the spill occurred in the middle of January 2011, that the chemicals spread from the asphalt onto soil, that the chemicals were not primarily latex paint and that city workers did not start to clean up the mess for about two weeks. One photograph shows that out of nine legible cans only one is latex.

The city also began damage control. City employees, who had dumped the chemicals or who were aware of the dumping, were ordered to work overtime on the Saturday and Sunday following the CalCoastNews story that exposed the issue, an employee said. During the two days of meetings, city management repeatedly told the employees the city’s official version of the incident while asking who had leaked information about the dumping.

Two weeks after the dumping, city staff asked Kerry Boyle, the city’s hazardous materials coordinator and a certified unified program agency inspector to examine the site. Until Thursday, it appeared city management supported Boyle’s conclusions.

“After observing the spill and conducting further investigation, Mr. Boyle concluded that approximately two to three gallons of creosote and oil-based paints from partially filled containers had spilled. In light of the small quantity of material, and the fact that the spill was contained on pavement, in his capacity as CUPA Inspector, Mr. Boyle concluded that the spill did not pose a risk to human health or the environment, and in addition, did not constitute a significant release triggering any reporting requirements,” Visveshwara said in her Dec. 16 email.

Nevertheless, it is illegal to dispose of hazardous waste including latex paints in the garbage, down storm drains, or onto the ground, according to the California Department of Resources, Recycling, and Recovery website.

Under the city’s stormwater and industrial waste permits, city staff was required to report the illicit chemical discharge to 12 agencies. DTSC requires reporting within 15 minutes of a purposeful chemical release and levels fines of up to $25,000 a day until properly reported. If the fines were imposed based on the date that the dumping occurred, the city would owe about $8.8 million.

Prior to the CalCoastNews story about the chemical dump, DTSC Public Information Officer Charlotte Fadipe said the agency was unaware of the alleged toxic release.

“Responsible stewardship of hazardous waste materials is critical, and we will work to address the alleged violations, and to evaluate possible impacts to the environment,” Fadipe said.  “We will work with those involved to make sure this does not occur again.”


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My oh my, where in the world do you find anyone that doesn’t know that dumping paint and varnishes on the ground is illegal if not just dumb? Slo county must have an idiot factory somewhere.


Hey hey.. the Trib finally did a story on this but as usual down played the arrogance and lies of SLO’s elitist green environmentally righteous leaders and how this was really so insignificant. So here’s a challenge to SLO’s naysayers. $500 cash no questions asked, for any of you that dump the exact same chemicals and amounts on a unsuspecting SLO residents driveway and front lawn. Then I contact the SLO FD and every other regulator involved in this case and we’ll all get to see how insignificant it is when its Joe Nobody and his property is involved. We can all be sure SLO and Dietrick will defend them too cant we?.


doggin, you are right on about the unequal justice, just look at the financial crooks. But why rag on the greenies, they (me) do not like these pollution spills. Turning this into a left right thing is off base, it is a matter of idiots and crooks in our midst, not political or environmental philosophy.


Did anyone hear the Dave Congalton Show yesterday? Talk about pulling the “I know nothing card”. Jan Marx wiggled her way out of the hot seat despite so many of us knowing that she is well informed about everything that has gone on surrounding the illegal dumping of the toxic substances in the city public works yard. I kept waiting for Dave to drop the axe, I thought he was just giving her enough rope to hang herself but it didn’t happen.


Same old same old, when called to task just deny all knowledge, who does she think she is kidding? I personally know of two staff that sent her e-mails about it. I also know she spoke with the city attorney about it in an emergency meeting. Dave Congalton is slipping, what a disappointment.


Someone ask Dave why he didn’t present her with this information.


Regarding the emergency meeting with city attorney Dietrick, I have just been informed that Jan Marx wasn’t present at that meeting. But she has been fully informed by other staff via several e-mails as was the rest of the CC. She did know a considerable amount of the details when she spoke with Dave.


Added comment: The District Attorney prosecutes any criminal violations (felonies and misdemeanors). County Counsel prosecutes the civil law regulatory violations.


Unless it is a public employee?


California Health and Safety Code 25217.1. No person shall dispose of, or attempt to dispose of,

liquid latex paint in the land or into the waters of the state unless authorized by applicable provisions of law.


Per DTSC (http://www.dtsc.ca.gov/InformationResources/Regulatory_Assistance_Frequently_Asked_Questions.cfm)


“Spreading latex paint for the purposes of drying and disposing of it is not permitted.”


All of these officials especially those who work in the CUPA should know this.


Isn’t there an unwritten “law” that MOST public officials surround other public officials to protect them regardless of whether they are breaking the law. For example, county and state employees enforcing laws protect city government employees when caught breaking laws.


The public employee “club” is a society. Most surround and protect each other. It is the private citizen they want to persecute and make an example of, if caught doing something which violates laws.


Oh, we are all paying for this behavior via taxes.


It’s called the “circle the wagons syndrome” and it’s used by government people all the time, be they firefighters, cops, lawyers, council members or maintenance yard workers. The theory is that what looks bad for one person, reflects bad on the entire organization. So they circle the wagons, clamp a lid on information and threaten people’s jobs, etc… to keep it quiet.

Trouble is, just as when settlers circled the wagons to fight Indians or gangs of outlaws,once the circle is breached the whole thing falls apart and the organization then hangs one person, a fall guy or gal, out to dry and pins everything on them. They’re gone now, so problem solved!

Unfortunately, given enough time, the public forgets about it and moves on, and the guilty are allowed to slink away, often times with a pension to take with them.


The players aren’t right in this story.


Ms. Dietrick, the City Attorney, and her assistant Ms. Visveshwara are not responsible for prosecution of CUPA (hazardous materials) violations. They advise the City Council.


CUPA, is a COUNTY of San Luis Obispo responsibility. The City is a CUPA participating agency and so they use Mr. Boyle, a city employee for inspections and coordination. However, the County Counsel’s office prosecutes. Mr. Warren Jensen is the County Counsel. Mr. Tim McNulty, Deputy County Counsel is the attorney who prosecutes cases for the Certified Unified Program Agency for the County of San Luis Obispo.


The State of California (DTSC) appointed the COUNTY of San Luis Obispo as the Certified Unified Program Agency for the County of San Luis Obispo. Part of what the CUPA does is enforce hazardous materials violations.


The City of San Luis Obispo – Fire Department is a participating agency. Mr. Kerry Boyle, a city employee, is the participating agency’s coordinator and inspects within the city limits.


The CUPA program is located in the County of San Luis Obispo, Health Agencies. Mr. Jeff Hamm is the County Health Agencies Director. Under Health Agencies, the CUPA is located in Environmental Health. Mr. Curt Batson is the Environmental Health Director and the CUPA program Director. Mr. Aaron LaBarre is the CUPA Supervisor.


If Mr. Boyle had an issue or a conflict with his position and his employer, he could have taken the matter to the City Fire Chief, to Mr. Aaron LaBarre and to Mr. McNulty in County Counsel’s office.

County Counsel is responsible for legal advice to the CUPA. Ms. Dietrick and her assistant would have been responsible for advising their clients, the City Council. The City would be the respondent in this case, not the prosecuting agency.


So, I think the story and comments are being unfairly harsh on Ms. Dietrick and her staff considering her responsibility is to advise the City (as a potential respondent) and she is not and never was the prosecuting attorney for the CUPA. What is the County CUPA program’s position on this?


What is curious is why the State of California Department of Toxic Substances is investigating and the County appears to have been skipped over. It should be the County taking over if Mr. Boyle had a conflict.


The attorney has loyalty to the client AND the legal system. They must represent clients within the bounds of the law. California lawyers may not knowingly advise their client to engage in criminal or fraudulent conduct. (Municipal attorneys should know laws related to hazardous waste.)


While there is attorney/client privilege related to communications, if an attorney believes their client is behaving illegally, they should resign.


If someone believes an attorney has not lived up to the ethical standards established by the Supreme Court and state legislature, a complaint can be filed with the State Bar.


The problem is a simple one accountability and oversight…. just like in the real world, supervisors need to ‘inspect what they expect’. Public administrators cannot use the tired excuse that they do not directly supervise this or that … Line managers need to be held accountable all up the line.


At a minimum, some administrator should lose their job.


There is an underlying issue which is more than accountability and oversight. There needs to come from the top down that illegal and unethical behavior will not be tolerated. There should be a written statement from the City Council.


Additionally, employees should not be afraid to whistle blow or tell the truth.


Wait a damn minute here! Where is the Union bashing and the concept of privatization in this subsequent article upon this topic?


I went back to the original article, although it was tediously difficult to read because you had to reopen the posts from Cindy, roy, racket, et al, because they were all hidden because of their embarrassing “dislikes” far out numbering their “likes”. Nonetheless, previously their mantra was the unions were the problem, where their follow-up was privatization!


You can here the crickets in the background in this second story about this issue, because the aforementioned are not ranting and raving about the Unions and privatization in this thread! Maybe they don’t want their “dislike” numbers plummeting to the point of embarrassment again?


It’s a known fact that I don’t believe unions have a place in the private sector. Especially when the rights of the servants are then further enhanced by the additional rights provided to gov employees through the government. Talk about scratching each others backs. I’m all for privatizing these segments of gummint one at a time so that new mandates can be implemented. Once we straighten them out, we can bring back these agencies under new oversight and regulations especially where all their special rights are concerned.


“It’s a known fact that I don’t believe unions have a place in the private sector.” Um, did you mean to say “public sector”? That would make some sort of sense in alignment with the rest of your comment; perhaps a not-so-subtle “Freudian Slip” indicating that you just plain hate unions, period?


Yes, I did mean public sector. I’m spaced out today, woke up with my cat sleeping on my face and took too much medication to counter it ;)


that explains everything, I was starting to think you had a disability